week 14 Flashcards
What effect does PO2 have on ventilation?
PO2 indirectly effects ventilation by changing chemoreceptors sensitivity to PCO2 via the Hypoxic Drive: carotid bodies contain neuron-like gloms cells that sense a large drop in PO2. They depolarize and stimulate different afferent neurons of the carotid sinus nerve (part of glossopharyngeal nerve) which signals medulla to increase breathing as a Hypoxic Ventilatory Response. the carotid bodies respond to O2 dissolved in plasma, and the level of hypoxemia that would stimulate this response only occurs in extreme conditions like high altitude (normally PO2 has no direct effect on breathing!)
*What are the three respiratory stimuli in normal conditions? Rank them from more important to least
- pH: directly stimulates breathing
- PCO2: main determiner of pH
- PO2: weakest stimuli, under normal conditions has no effect
*How is the control of breathing changed in a person with emphysema?
Emphysema causes chronically high CO2 that causes chemoreceptors to become blunted. Therefore the Hypoxic Drive becomes the main stimulus of breathing instead of pH. This is a problem when emphysemic patients are given an oxygen mask because the high oxygen will lower the hypoxic drive response and the person will cease breathing (respiratory arrest). You can use a bag-valve mask to manually ventilate the patient if needed.
What is the structure of the molecule that contains most of the oxygen in blood?
Hemoglobin consists of four polypeptide chains (globins) and four iron-containing pigment molecules (hemes). The protein part is made of two alpha chains and two beta chains. The iron molecule is located at the center of the heme (which is in center of proteins) and can combine with oxygen.
Describe four different types of hemoglobin depending on what it is bound too
Oxyhemoglobin: iron is bound to oxygen (tomato red color)
Deoxyhemoglobin/Reduced hemoglobin: iron is not bound to oxygen, but is still reduced (maroon color?)
Methemoglobin/Oxidized hemoglobin: iron is in oxidized state and cannot participate in oxygen transport
Carboxyhemoglobin: iron is bound to carbon monoxide instead of oxygen. CO is 210 times stronger bond than O2. (maroon cranberry juice color)
What is measured to assess how well lungs have oxygenated the blood? What is a normal value and what is one condition that can lower this value?
Percent Oxyhemoglobin Saturation (percentage of oxyhemoglobin to total hemoglobin) is measured by a pulse oximeter or blood-gas machine. Normal value is 97% and is determined because each hemoglobin types has a unique color and absorbs light differently (oximeter measures light absorption). Oxyhemoglobin is bright red and carboxyhemoglobin is maroon.
Carbon Monoxide poisoning lowers the oxyhemoglobin saturation but is not detectable via pulse oximeter because the CO bound hemoglobin still measures the same result (?). CO poisoning causes bright red skin in its victims
What factors increase or decrease oxygen carrying capacity?
Anemia (low hemoglobin) lowers oxygen content while polycythemia (high RBC count) increases oxygen content at high altitude. Production of hemoglobin and RBCs is controlled by Erythropoietin produced in the kidneys. Testosterone also promotes RBC production, which is why men have higher hemoglobin than women.
What are the loading and unloading reactions and where do they occur? What factors affect the extent of each reaction?
Loading reaction is Deoxyhemoglobin + oxygen = oxyhemoglobin while unloading reaction is oxyhemoglobin = deoxyhemoglobin + oxygen. Loading occurs in lungs and unloading in capillaries/tissues. PO2 of the environment and the affinity of hemoglobin/oxygen affect the direction of the reaction. High PO2 drives loading in lung capillaries and low PO2 drives unloading in tissue capillaries. Strong affinity (bond strength) favors loading and weak affinity favors unloading, normally bonds are strong enough so 97% of hemoglobin is oxygen bound in lungs but weak enough to unload in tissues.
Describe the graph that shows unloading percentages. How much oxygen is unloaded to tissues at rest and how long does the remaining oxygen last if breathing stops?
Oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve shows % O2 saturation vs PO2 can predict unloading percentage given PO2 values (arterial and venous). At rest, there is only 22% of oxygen that is unloaded to tissues (arterial PO2 is 22% higher than venous PO2). The large amount of remaining oxyhemoglobin provides a reserve that will keep the brain and heart alive for 4-5 minutes without breathing (CPR can extend this time by circulating the oxygen reserve). Exercise can also tap this reserve
What is the shape of the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve and what does that indicate about the effect of PO2 changes?
It is sigmoidal (S shaped). When PO2 values are very high the graph is flat, so changes in PO2 have little effect on loading reaction. When PO2 values are very low the graph is steep, meaning that small changes in PO2 cause large changes in percent saturation. Note that it is Venous PO2 that decreases, not arterial which remains at 97%. For example, during exercise the venous PO2 drops as low as 20 mmHg or 17% saturation, so unloading percent is 97% - 17% = 80%
*Describe the effects of pH and temperature on oxygen transport and the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve
Affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen directly impacts the rate of loading vs unloading reaction in a tissue
- Affinity increases when pH increases due to the Bohr effect. Active tissues metabolize = makes CO2 = lowers pH = lower hemoglobin affinity = more oxygen released. The curve shifts right when pH is lowered (acidic) meaning greater unloading, and left which pH is raised (alkaline) meaning less unloading
- Affinity decreases as temp increases. Active tissues are warmer = lower hemoglobin affinity = more oxygen released. Curve shifts right with rising temperature meaning greater unloading and shifts left with lower temperature meaning less unloading.
Sickle cell anemia is the most common monogenic disorder and is found in people of African descent. What is the cause of the disease and how is it treated?
It is a hemoglobinopathy where a single valine is substituted for a glutamic acid in the beta chains of hemoglobin, producing Hemoglobin S instead of the normal hemoglobin A. When hemoglobin S is deoxygenated it makes long fibrous (sickle) shapes that blocks vessels and reduces blood flow, leading to infarctions, severe pain/damage, and hemolysis/anemia. It is treated with Hydroxyurea which stimulates production of hemoglobin gamma chains instead of beta (Hemoglobin F). Bone marrow transplant or gene therapy are also sometimes used
Name two hemoglobinopathies and who they effect
Sickle cell anemia in Africans
Thalassemia in Mediterraneans
How is myoglobin different from hemoglobin?
Found only in striated muscles, it has one heme instead of four and so only bonds one oxygen molecule. It also has higher affinity for oxygen than hemoglobin (dissociation curve is to the left) and only releases oxygen when PO2 is very low (curve is rectangular, not sigmoidal). It acts as a go-between from blood to mitochondria (where PO2 is very low) and functions to store oxygen, particularly in the heart. Remember, myoglobin releases O2 while in systole. Carbon Monoxide has even higher affinity for myoglobin than hemoglobin, so CO easily causes myocardial depression
What are the three forms that CO2 is transported in? Describe how the most common form is made
- dissolved CO2 in plasma is about 1/10th of total CO2
- carbaminohemoglobin (CO2 attached to an amino acid in hemoglobin) is about 1/5th of total CO2
- bicarbonate ion in blood is the rest of CO2 (Vast majority!). CO2 combines with water and converts to carbonic acid via the enzyme *Carbonic Anhydrase, present *only in RBCs. The carbonic acid then quickly dissociates into H+ and bicarbonate, which diffuses into plasma
*What is the chloride shift?
CO2 converts to carbonic acid (Carbonic Anhydrase) which dissociates to H+ and bicarbonate. Bicarbonate diffuses outward into the plasma more than H+ does, so the trapped H+ ions create a net positive charge in the RBC. This attracts chloride ions to move in the cell in exchange for bicarbonate moving out. This is the Chloride Shift and occurs in metabolically active Tissues!
The Bohr effect states that H+ increases unloading of oxygen from oxyhemoglobin, and deoxyhemoglobin bonds H+ more strongly than oxyhemoglobin meaning O2 stays unloaded in metabolically active tissues. As H+ is removed by binding hemoglobin, the law of mass action supports creation of carbonic acid and increases transport of CO2 away in blood.
*What is the reverse chloride shift
In Pulmonary capillaries, carbonic acid (formed because deoxyhemoglobin is converted to hemoglobin which has less H+ affinity, so free H+ combines with bicarbonate to make carbonic acid) is converted to water and CO2 gas (via Carbonic Anhydrase in low PCO2 conditions) which can be eliminated in breath (bicarbonate cannot be exhaled). Entrance of bicarbonate into the RBCs causes chloride to leave the cell, making a reverse chloride shift.
What is the normal pH of blood and what is abnormal? What are the normal acids in blood and what buffers them?
Normal pH is 7.35 - 7.45, slightly alkaline. Below 7.35 is called acidosis and above 7.45 is alkalosis. There is volatile acid (carbonic acid) which can be exhaled and nonvolatile acids (lactic acid, ketone bodies, fatty acids) that cannot be exhaled. Usually, these nonvolatile acids don’t affect pH too much because H+ ions are bound to buffers, particularly Bicarbonate. The kidneys also serve to remove excess H+ and reabsorb bicarbonate to maintain acid-base balance of the blood.
*describe the four types of acid-base imbalances and what causes them
- Respiratory acidosis: inadequate ventilation (hypoventilation) rises CO2 and carbonic acid. Emphysema, asthma, and COPD may cause
- Respiratory alkalosis: hyperventilation decreases CO2
- Metabolic acidosis: excessive production of nonvolatile acids (ketone bodies in diabetes mellitus) that produce H+. Or loss of bicarbonate (which buffers H+) due to excessive diarrhea that eliminates bicarbonate in pancreatic juice
- Metabolic alkalosis: excessive bicarbonate from intravenous infusion or inadequate nonvolatile acids due to vomiting that eliminates acid in gastric juice
What organs maintain blood pH? How can they work together in response to imbalance and how long does it take to respond?
Lungs maintain the respiratory component (CO2 concentration) and kidneys maintain the metabolic component (bicarbonate concentration). Disturbances in one component may be compensated for by changes in the other component. If the primary disturbance is metabolic, changes in ventilation will adjust within hours. But if the disturbance is respiratory, the secondary metabolic response will take days.
Describe the ventilation responses that occur with acid-base imbalances in blood. Also what other symptoms occur with hyperventilation?
Hypoventilation increases CO2, causing respiratory acidosis, while Hyperventilation decreases CO2, causing respiratory alkalosis. (Hyperventilation also causes dizziness by raising pH of CSF and inducing cerebral vasoconstriction, and Hypocalcemic Tetany by increasing the amount of calcium bound to albumin and lowering free calcium which makes nerves overexcitable.) Changing ventilation can also compensate for metabolic imbalances, e.g. metabolic acidosis (from diabetes!) causes hyperventilation and metabolic alkalosis causes hypoventilation